View clinical trials related to Cervical Cancer.
Filter by:The primary purpose of this study is to assess the safety and tolerability of AB598 when taken alone, and in combination with zimberelimab and standard chemotherapy in participants with advanced malignancies.
The goal of this interventional clinical trial is to learn about TNG260, a CoREST inhibitor, in combination with pembrolizumab in patients with advanced solid tumors with a known STK11 mutation. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - the recommended dose for Phase 2 - to evaluate the safety and tolerability of the combination therapy - to determine the pharmacokinetics of TNG260 - to evaluate the initial antineoplastic activity Participants will receive study treatment until they experience an undesirable side effect, their disease progresses or until they withdraw consent.
This study is a Prospective, Multicenter, non-interventive Real-world Study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the treatment of Serplulimab in patients with Advanced,Recurrent and Metastatic Cervical Cancer. Approximately 118 eligible subjects are planned to be enrolled across all sites.
The goal of this study is to determine efficacy and safety of envafolimab combined with Endostar and concurrent chemoradiation in the treatment of locally advanced primary cervical cancer. Thirty participants will be divided into control group (n = 15) and experimental group (n = 15). The control group received concurrent chemoradiation, and the experimental group received envafolimab combined with endostar and concurrent chemoradiation.
This study is a prospective cohort clinical trial that aims to investigate the safety and efficacy of a combined chemoradiotherapy and immunotherapy treatment for early postoperative cervical cancer. Specifically, this study seeks to evaluate the ability of MRD-based screening to detect and monitor changes in MRD status at different stages of treatment, its potential for use in monitoring patient recurrence rates and in prognosis evaluation. In addition, this study will investigate the safety and effectiveness of chemoradiotherapy combined with immunotherapy as a postoperative adjuvant therapy for patients identified to be at risk of early cervical cancer based on MRD screening.
Cervical cancer screening is important as it enables identification of women at increased risk of the disease, but high-quality diagnostics of screen-positive women and effective treatment of those with precancer are critical in preventing progression to cancer. With the current transition from cytology-based to primary human papillomavirus (HPV)-screening and a growing proportion of HPV-vaccinated women, diagnostics of screen-positive women will become more challenging in the decades to come. Thus, there is a need to explore how to improve diagnostics while ensuring a low number of unnecessary procedures such as colposcopy and the collection of multiple cervical biopsies. The overall purpose is: - To investigate the diagnostic accuracy of cervical precancer when using a colposcopic scoring system in the diagnostic work-up of screen-positive women. - To investigate the performance of a colposcopic scoring system to identify women without cervical precancer in whom collection of biopsies can be safely omitted.
This study is aimed to enroll patients with early-stage cervical cancer (FIGO 2018 IB1-IB2) who undergo radical hysterectomy and the postoperative pathology doesn't meet Sedlis criteria or the "four-factor" model but with poorly differentiated squamous/adenocarcinoma/adenosquamous carcinoma. Patients will be randomly divided into two groups in a 1:1 ratio. The experimental group received 4 courses of paclitaxel and cisplatin (once every 3 weeks) for adjuvant chemotherapy within 4 weeks after surgery, while the control group don't not receive any adjuvant therapy but only received regular follow-up. The disease status of all patients will be evaluated within 4 weeks after the end of all treatment and every 12 weeks thereafter, including gynecological examination, laboratory indicators, imaging evaluation, and the prognosis of the two groups will be compared.
Tislelizumab combined with chemoradiotherapy in the treatment of recurrent/ metastasis cervical cancer: a single arm,single center, phase ii and observational clinical study
The goal of this study is to develop and test an intervention program to improve cervical cancer prevention among Muslim American women. The main questions the investigators aim to answer are: - Will the religiously tailored and culturally appropriate intervention program improve participants' knowledge and acceptance of cervical cancer prevention? - Is the intervention program feasible to conduct and acceptable to participants? Participants will be asked to: - Attend focus group sessions to provide input on the development of educational materials. - Complete pre- and post-intervention surveys to measure changes in knowledge and acceptance of cervical cancer prevention. - Engage in the intervention program, which includes education and experiential practice/communication skills training. - Provide feedback through satisfaction surveys. Researchers will compare participant outcomes before and after the intervention to assess its effectiveness. Additionally, the program's feasibility and acceptability will be evaluated based on enrollment rates, successful implementation, participant engagement, retention, and satisfaction.
AI-061 is a co-formulation drug product (DP) consisting of 1:1 ratio mix of AI-025, an anti-PD-1 antibody, and ONC-392, an anti-CTLA-4 antibody. This is a dose escalation study to identify the maximum toxicity dose (MTD) or the recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D).